I can't help but wonder how he feels about what's going on now. So many parallels between him being hamstrung from getting this info out and what's happened with the outgoing administration with regards to the pandemic.
Try to say something the rain in Spain falls mainly in the plain the rain in Spain falls mainly in the plain the rain in Spain falls mainly in the plain got the boysbb b
Russell Crowe should have really gotten the oscar for his performance. His facial expressions and the way he spoke was like a duplicate of the real man.
Crowe was masterful in The Insider. His best role, ever, in my view. The scene in his hotel room, on the phone with Lowell Bergman, was a key one. It captured what it cost him to blow the whistle.
@@VtRD Since I don't see him that often, I always forget what a incredibly talented actor Russell Crowe is. Put him with Al Pacino, and you have one captivating movie.
Weigand deserves whatever he wants. You can see in his face that he has a moral compass like few others. He lost everything he loved ro save people he never knew or would ever meet. Absolute legend for all of humanity
@@jameshoran8that is absolutely not true, his wife left him because big tobacco was threatening their family and she wanted him to give up being a whistleblower, her last straw was a bullet in their mailbox. his being a whistleblower caused a great amount of tension in their marriage and he was know to have struck her once during a fight about it, which was the beginning of the end for her
"The Insider" was a HUGELY influential film in my life. As a younger man, I couldn't *believe* that humans running a corporation could be so bloody TWISTED and broken. Russell Crowe was *BRILLIANT* in figuring out Wigand's extremely unique accent (his background was SPECIAL... Bronx & Japanese!!)... and, Crowe's hair was falling out as they tried to dye it. Unbelievable work from the entire cast.
are oil companies any different wrt climate change? emails leaked to NY Times a few years ago allegedly show a pattern of misinformation to deliberately mislead the public and create doubts about IPCC reports. Its all about money, not the public interest.
The insider was such a remarkable movie, being made so soon after this whole issue with CBS and Jeffrey w Wigand and B&W period Michael Mann created of basically flawless film that should be recognized as one of the best ever made. Now of course a question I have is how did Michael Mann, Al Pacino, and Russell Crowe, NOT get sued by Brown & Williamson for making the movie?. Also, Christopher Plummer was absolutely Oscar worthy for his supporting role as Mike Wallace
Except that here, CBS Corporation tried to interfere seriously in the CBS News dept. and to make them cut the Wigand interview.... Great journalism is constantly on a balancing act with management, revenues of tobacco sponsoring are quite considerable
This was the hallmark case that revield the corporate and private equity firms takeover of our media. The Insider (the movie, based on the true story around this interview) shows of the strongarming over the news by PE firms (one in particular that is currently the largest fund of all time), and beginning of the slow death of investigative journalism and journalistic integrity.
My mother, a respiratory therapist, asked this man to speak at our local rural high school. HE DID. She still has his signed cards, and I remember getting permission as one of only a few middle schoolers to attend (simply because my mother insisted and sent permiss. notes). One of the greatest achievements of her life. She was so proud to have all 5 of her kids in that high school auditorium, to listen to the scientist, that would tell us the risks of smoking. We grew up in households where it was common, almost ritualistic, in tradition to do so. In the 90s/ early 00s, this was unheard of. So proud of her. So proud of Mr. Wigand, who has really made a difference, to tell the truth, even when people don't want to hear it. Thank you, sincerely from Clay Center. I remember you, the little girl in the back of the dark auditorium, you were wonderful. And it did make a difference, I do not smoke, not simply for my wonderful mother, but because of what you did too. If nothing else, you saved my life, be that an exaggeration or not, you had an impact.
I give him credit. Think of how many people work for these companies and never say anything. Any company that has to hire that many lawyers to tell "the truth" is definitely hiding something. You are a hero. I hope if I'm ever in a similar situation that I have half the balls you do.
Thank you Dr. Wigand. My father died in 1969 at the age of 37. He was a habitual smoker, 2 packs a day. Bless you for exposing the cigarette industry. I have not ever smoked. It’s a disgusting habit.
Also, in an interview, Wigand spoke highly of Crowe's portrayal of himself in the movie. Wigand went on to say that he was amazed how Crowe absorbed and then duplicated certain little behavioral quirks of his ... quirks Wigand himself was not really aware of until he saw it on the big screen and then thought, "Oh yeah, I do that, don't I?"
both Christopher Plumber and Russell Crowe did a oscar worthy performance. and I was very surprised by seeing how much the movie is accurate to the real events. usually Hollywood does lot of stupid unnecessary changes to these kind of movies. but this was very accurate to the point
If the tobacco companies are saying that nicotine is not addictive, doesn't the disclaimer on the side of cigarette packs which is kind of like a "smoke At your own risk" warning kind of absolve the tobacco companies from liability since it's a personal choice for people to smoke?
Dr Jeffrey Wigand - A true American hero! Honest and Integrity here. Thank you for your honesty in the face of overwhelming odds. The movie - 'The Insider' - is highly recommended... Especially Al Pacino played the role of the Producer of 60mins
I just saw the film last night and the acting of Crowe and Plummer during that interview is so spookily accurate, down to the dialogue and hand manners. Great film.
This was one HELLUVA interview and story! Wow. 60 Minutes has done some legendary work over the years. This has to be one of the best. Dr Wigand is a hero, that certainly put it all on the line. "The Insider" told his story quite beautifully too. Talk about HUGE pressure
Many times, the truth is spoken by people who are less than perfect. That doesn't make the truth any less truthful. It is extremely difficult to speak truth to power. There are many ways in which someone can be hurt. For Dr. Wigand to still come out despite possibly losing his child and/or wife is nothing short of miraculous. I'm not saying he is a good man. I'm saying he stands out from the pack.
No one is perfect. Dr. Wigand included. As a scientist who knows about how tobacco is metabolized, and an insider at B & W, he literally blew the lid off the information about the addictive quality of cigarettes and pipe tobacco. True American hero, in my view--risked much to protect many.
That is correct. Wiggands' conduct is not relevant to the cause of cancer in the patients or any potential adverse or beneficial effects of tobacco consumption.
Dr wigand's ex wife she deciede to level false allegations against him just because he became broke and she wanted to continue the her lifestyle at his expense
@Edgar Alvarez Don't forget about all the good ol' junk food, energy drinks and sodas that help fuel the obesity epidemic. Gas stations are really just disease stations on all fronts.
Modern journalism could take a lesson from this production. In the face of overwhelming corruption and intense pressure, 60 minutes didn't role over to the deepest pockets at that time. Simply admirable.
If you know anything about Dr. Wigand's story, you know that CBS and 60 Minutes absolutely DID roll over for the tobacco industry, they refused to run the story until Wigand went to the extent of giving an extremely risky public deposition in Mississippi, which the Wall Street Journal picked up and ran as a story. As soon as CBS saw that they were going to lose exclusivity on the case, and that the cat would get out of the bag whether or not they held the story, they flip-flopped and ran the interview in the end. So yeah, not as courageous as you think, more an effort to save face.
Ah, but they almost did- the only reason they had the ability not to (and save their credibility) was because of B&W playing it too fast and loose sending that obvious smear dossier to the Times, which got all the press in NYC on Wigan’s side (out of pride, mostly- they didn’t want to be played like fools), and that coinciding with the sale of CBS after the story was initially squashed by its CEO (Lawrence Tisch) who also owned the 4th largest tobacco company in the U.S. Had that sale not happened, either at all or at least before the Times article dropped, it’s likely 60 Minutes wouldn’t have ran the story at all. What’s the lesson there? Well to the corporations, it was “hey, all we gotta do is consolidate power more!” Because now, the same megacorp that owned CBS would also own the Times, and they’d own majority shares in the company CBS got sold to. And then none of this would happen - the same message to squash the story 60 Minutes got, the Times would get. CBS gets sold, it’s reporters ask if they can run the story now, the answer is still “No.”
They almost did. Remember, they didn't air his interview in the first cut of the story, out of fear of a B&W lawsuit. It wasn't until the Mississippi case that they found enough courage to face the lesser risk. Still, it's a lot better than what's going on today.
Tobacco firms knew that cigarettes cause cancer way back in 1950s but the companies suppressed all of medical studies not to reach the addiction. Tobacco is big business vapes, gums, patches are the alternatives .
It's amazing to see this, so many years after watching The Insider, which I saw AT LEAST 3x. It's one of the best movies, based on actual events, ever made. Jeffrey Wigand is a hero...pretty cool watching the actual 60min episode..no wonder Russell Crowe is Russell Crowe..and Michael Mann is Michael Mann
@@AndyJackson380 It's about acting bro. It might look easy to you because they obviously "saw" the interview but to produce it and improvise it while keeping it close to the original is a challenge. You see that Russell Crowe looks more paranoid in the movie than wigand in real life.
@@dehlanshandirkayr6182 Within the movie, it's also noticeable that when Wigand shoots the interview, the dialogue between interviewee and interviewer plays out differently than the final interview, showing editing that happened in post-production to adjust the flow of the interview.
Darth Structure by having sold their souls to Mr Lucifer Mephistopheles Beelzebub when they pass the bar. I almost went to law school but never did and am damned glad. My soul remains intact and my life still has every bit of its original value if not a whole heap more. Dont get me wrong; I am 60 and I would enroll today in the event of asponsor interested in paying my tuition at an online law school, like Abramaham Lincoln University.
The movie "The Insider" revolve around this. Al Pacino and Russell Crowe were a fantastic duo. It shows how big tobacco silenced scientists and evidence.
Clifford Bodine. Thought provoking, indeed. But if there IS a god & he's supposed to be loving & just; supposed to be the complete opposite of the Devil, why would he reward a wicked bast**** like Sandifur with heavenly life?!
calodo2002. In one brief statement you're forgetting why Wigand chose the job with B&W in the 1st place. His aim was to create a NON-ADDICTIVE cigarette. What sounds impossible to you & I is very possible for a man with Wigand's knowledge of chemistry (and physics), his tenacious determination to make it a reality, and B&W's bottomless pocketbook Wigand saw a way to change things for the better from INSIDE "the system," because this approach, had it worked, would've been more practical than piecing apart and taking the giant monster down. And that's because the tobacco industry is simply too powerful. It exactly resembles the disposition of the senators, congressmen, high-powered lawyers, & various other behind-the-scenes political and financial power-brokers who keep the beast alive & well. They're fond of what is their own, and esp the wealth it generates, in BILLIONS of dollars at the expense of it's victims, the addicted smokers. "Killing millions to make million$" was an expression coined for this back in the 80's Anyway, think for a just a minute about what you're really doing here. In the same statement you're also discrediting Wigand for the good he HAS managed to accomplish. Big tobacco has indeed been forced to pay millions of dollars in retroactive health costs to the state Medicare systems of Kentucky and of Mississippi. Thanks to him the "Seven Dwarfs"- - the seven heads of big tobacco who lied, straight-faced to Congress, saying cigarettes ARE NOT addictive under oath- - were exposed for this entire scandal. So greedy & heartless are they that the billions already being made weren't enough. They had to make cigarettes EVEN MORE addictive, just so MORE people than ever before would get hooked on cigarettes, and so that those ALREADY hooked would SPEND EVEN MORE on cigarettes than they already were! ! Such unimaginable wickedness! ! >>: (
60 Minutes was the most excellent, classiest, magnificent and prestigious news program ever created on network television! Morley Safer! Mike Wallace! Ed Bradley! Diane Sawyer! Andy Rooney! What an amazing, awesome and allstar cast of masterpiece/masterclass news journalists! Thank you for this upload.
@@V.E.R.O. Thanks for the morbidity update. By wearing your mask and washing your hands for at least 25 seconds; you too can do your part in preventing the the spread of covid19.
Dr wigand's ex wife she deciede to level false allegations against him just because he became broke and she wanted to continue the her lifestyle at his expense
I am currently watching the movie feeling very sorry for Dr. Wigand and sacrifice he made loosing everything but glad the truth always remains the truth and saves the day!.
In the movie,The Insider, Dr.Wigand was depicted as a week person. The reality showed the contrary. The man is very articulate and he enjoyed a very confident personal.
This is why we must be critical of ALL industries, there are very few people with this much integrity in this world. So we must do our own investigating...
I just finished watching the movie the Insider and it was good and showed how they tried everything to ruin his credibility hoping people wouldn't pay attention to anything he says
I just love how this big tobacco company man said "it's their choice to quit". It would be if his company hadn't perverted tobacco so much by creating ways to make nicotine more addictive, that some people are literally unable to quit. Stop adding additional poisons to your tobacco and give smokers a fighting chance to quit.
After many unsuccessful attempts at quitting, I told my mind that it had been lied to, manipulated and abused and it should get VERY angry. That did it. I started hating everyone involved in the sale of tobacco.
And the corporate food industry is guilty of the same tactics- aggressive marketing of unhealthy food to children and denying that the role that the food industry has played in the obesity epidemic.
If you want to find out who is lying, find out whom you are not allowed to criticize. If you want to find out who is telling the truth, find out whom they are trying to silence.
I’ve had 2 uncles 1aunt,1cousin, who’ve died from stage 4 lung cancer that came about from smoking,my aunt on my moms side and cousin on my dads side died the same day the same age67,same disease lung cancer also 2 of my childhood friends whom I’ve known for over 40 years have COPD,thank God I stopped in 1996,Mr Wigand ThankYou and May God Bless and keep you.
@@Defender78 I just want to thank for coming to that brilliant deduction that they should have stopped and your ground breaking research to come to the conclusion that it was their fault,sir you are a genius!
This makes me really ANGRY! At 5 years old my family went on a long trip; In a car with windows closed & a father who smoked constantly! I was guilty of hiding his "smokes" from the trip & within 30 miles down the road, I admitted to taken the cigarettes out of my parents suitcase & hiding them. We had to go back to retrieve all of them. I was in major trouble... even though I confessed! Obviously I could not tolerate cigarettes in 1968 even though I didn't know anything about tobacco. Three of us out of four people couldn't stand the smell & I was always coffin. But us 3 people didn't have a chance, we had to put up with it anyway. All these years later; the 3 of us haven't ever smoked and are still alive yet the smoker died 35 years ago. I knew when I was a little girl that it was BAD ENOUGH too hide it. This gentleman did the right thing to come forward with the truth. Not far he's had to pay the price that cost him so much!
Not to mention getting his body to look like middle-aged guy with a belly. The fact that he sculpted his body to do The Gladiator next is pretty impressive.
This is just sick. I always say we need to put these cigarette companies out of business, and stop gas stations and stores from selling tobacco products. I lost my grandmother to lung cancer almost a decade ago. She had smoked a long time ago, but quit. I was so upset when I heard she had passed. Let’s come together, and stop these dirty companies from selling something that kills thousands of people every year.
The Insider is the terrific film that tells this story. Lowell Bergman and Wigand are heroes. Thomas Sandefur, head of Brown and Williamson, is as corrupt and evil as they come. Tragically, for the American public, he still holds that position.
Hey- I gots an idear- let's put _ammonia_ in our cigarettes and make them even _more_ noxious. Then we will flavor them directly with *cancer cells.* _Hehe._
I might eat, but I don't smoke. I seldom have a drink and I don't mess with drugs. I'm glad I got an educational lesson on the dangers of tobacco in school.
Started listening to the podcast American Scandal & they did a story on Big Tobacco which brought me here & wow! Great journalism from 60 minutes & amazing story overall
What will we ever do without the original 60 Minutes correspondents here to do hard reporting and deliver it with integrity? They were groundbreaking for their time and simply the best
I miss Mike. Whatever happened to investagetive journalism? ?? We need the young people to go into IJ and expose these terrible people who run and protect corrupt corporations.
I agree, we do. But ofttimes people who rustle up stories are then dragged though mud. It's especially bad now, in the age of social media. People need to realize that someone can have different opinions than you and that that doesn't make them an enemy.
I was thinking the same thing. Watched the movie last night, and watched this video just now. I thought, "Wtf, I could've sworn that guy was in the movie." Now I see that he played himself in the movie, lol.
Dr Jeffrey Wigand
A true American hero.
Thank you for your honesty in the face of overwhelming odds.
💯
I can't help but wonder how he feels about what's going on now. So many parallels between him being hamstrung from getting this info out and what's happened with the outgoing administration with regards to the pandemic.
Try to say something the rain in Spain falls mainly in the plain the rain in Spain falls mainly in the plain the rain in Spain falls mainly in the plain got the boysbb b
@@Bryan8329 BBC news
He did the right thing even knowing there would be consequences.
Russell Crowe should have really gotten the oscar for his performance. His facial expressions and the way he spoke was like a duplicate of the real man.
Channeling Jim Braddock in a similar fashion for Cinderella Man.
Crowe was masterful in The Insider. His best role, ever, in my view. The scene in his hotel room, on the phone with Lowell Bergman, was a key one. It captured what it cost him to blow the whistle.
thanks for suggesting the movie. :)
Crowe could have (and maybe should have) won three oscars in a row: The Insider, Gladiator, and A Beautiful Mind.
@@VtRD Since I don't see him that often, I always forget what a incredibly talented actor Russell Crowe is. Put him with Al Pacino, and you have one captivating movie.
Weigand deserves whatever he wants.
You can see in his face that he has a moral compass like few others.
He lost everything he loved ro save people he never knew or would ever meet.
Absolute legend for all of humanity
And his wife bailed on him because she loved the money.
@@jameshoran8that is absolutely not true, his wife left him because big tobacco was threatening their family and she wanted him to give up being a whistleblower, her last straw was a bullet in their mailbox. his being a whistleblower caused a great amount of tension in their marriage and he was know to have struck her once during a fight about it, which was the beginning of the end for her
Well a useless woman will leave the side of her man when the going gets tough.
"The Insider" was a HUGELY influential film in my life.
As a younger man, I couldn't *believe* that humans running a corporation could be so bloody TWISTED and broken.
Russell Crowe was *BRILLIANT* in figuring out Wigand's extremely unique accent (his background was SPECIAL... Bronx & Japanese!!)... and, Crowe's hair was falling out as they tried to dye it.
Unbelievable work from the entire cast.
are oil companies any different wrt climate change? emails leaked to NY Times a few years ago allegedly show a pattern of misinformation to deliberately mislead the public and create doubts about IPCC reports. Its all about money, not the public interest.
The insider was such a remarkable movie, being made so soon after this whole issue with CBS and Jeffrey w
Wigand and B&W period Michael Mann created of basically flawless film that should be recognized as one of the best ever made. Now of course a question I have is how did Michael Mann, Al Pacino, and Russell Crowe, NOT get sued by Brown & Williamson for making the movie?. Also, Christopher Plummer was absolutely Oscar worthy for his supporting role as Mike Wallace
omg I knewwww it was a ny accent but it was also so weird
So many great actors and performances in that movie
Thanks for the movie recommendation!
Man, I love these 60 Minutes archive videos. They've done some truly great journalism over the years.
Unlike 60 minutes Australia 🇦🇺 where comments are turned off smh
Except that here, CBS Corporation tried to interfere seriously in the CBS News dept. and to make them cut the Wigand interview.... Great journalism is constantly on a balancing act with management, revenues of tobacco sponsoring are quite considerable
This was the hallmark case that revield the corporate and private equity firms takeover of our media. The Insider (the movie, based on the true story around this interview) shows of the strongarming over the news by PE firms (one in particular that is currently the largest fund of all time), and beginning of the slow death of investigative journalism and journalistic integrity.
yeah this is great
Great journalism means great in covering up for stories like this.
Damn Russel Crowe did an amazing job as Jeffrey in the film " The Insider "
He sure did, I almost think De Niro would’ve been a good choice, but with him and Pacino already in Heat, Crowe fit the role perfectly.
Nah……Crowe really nailed that idealistic, innocent and emotionally vulnerable persona. You felt for the guy genuinely during the movie.
Sometimes it’s hard to get an idea of how good these actors are until we get a direct comparison like this.
I quit smoking 28 years ago.
Love it. I quit June 1, 2014 at 4:06 pm Pacific. I'll get where you are (30+ years some day).
My mother, a respiratory therapist, asked this man to speak at our local rural high school. HE DID. She still has his signed cards, and I remember getting permission as one of only a few middle schoolers to attend (simply because my mother insisted and sent permiss. notes). One of the greatest achievements of her life. She was so proud to have all 5 of her kids in that high school auditorium, to listen to the scientist, that would tell us the risks of smoking. We grew up in households where it was common, almost ritualistic, in tradition to do so. In the 90s/ early 00s, this was unheard of. So proud of her. So proud of Mr. Wigand, who has really made a difference, to tell the truth, even when people don't want to hear it. Thank you, sincerely from Clay Center. I remember you, the little girl in the back of the dark auditorium, you were wonderful. And it did make a difference, I do not smoke, not simply for my wonderful mother, but because of what you did too. If nothing else, you saved my life, be that an exaggeration or not, you had an impact.
I’m also a Respiratory Therapist, I’m a fan of Hero Respiratory Therapist like your Mother.
I give him credit. Think of how many people work for these companies and never say anything. Any company that has to hire that many lawyers to tell "the truth" is definitely hiding something. You are a hero. I hope if I'm ever in a similar situation that I have half the balls you do.
Whenever lawyers are involved, don't expect the truth.
The safest cigarette is one in an unopened pack, thrown into a trash can.
No because that is a fire hazard
There is not a thing called a safe cigarette. Tell it like it is.
You forgot to soak the pack in water first!
Better yet, the one that is never made.
Jeffrey Wigand, an American hero.
@Edd 1 Russell Crowe is living legend in film.
World Hero
As Rabbitohs in Rugby League
@@TheresaPowers no, what he means to say is: jeffrey wigand IS russell crowe
*@Hello2Jello4Mellow* "Jiggle while you wiggle while youre wiggling free, while you jiggle while you wiggle ib a jiggling spree" 😆😋🤣😋!
Thank you Dr. Wigand. My father died in 1969 at the age of 37. He was a habitual smoker, 2 packs a day. Bless you for exposing the cigarette industry. I have not ever smoked. It’s a disgusting habit.
@@godismy4 thank you for being so kind. It’s been so long, only my Mother & I remember him.
@@godismy4 But there's a difference when you lie about manipulating a cigarette to make it more addictive and tell your customers it's fine
TROLLL
Man Pacino and Russell Crowe both deserved an oscar for that performance extraordinary..
No the tobacco industry made sure that would never happen.
I have been trying to track this down for YEARS, including talking to Dr. Wigand. THANK YOU FOR UPLOADING! Made my day.
The movie'The Insider' is highly recommended... Especially Al Pacino played the role of the Producer of 60mins. ..Amazing
Russell Crowe was also amazing -- he was only 34 playing a 51-year-old very convincingly.
Also, in an interview, Wigand spoke highly of Crowe's portrayal of himself in the movie. Wigand went on to say that he was amazed how Crowe absorbed and then duplicated certain little behavioral quirks of his ... quirks Wigand himself was not really aware of until he saw it on the big screen and then thought, "Oh yeah, I do that, don't I?"
One of my favorites films ever. Crowe and Pacino (especially Crowe, he was insanely awesome there) on fire, great director Michael Mann, great script
Modern masterpiece--every performance was spot on. Christopher Plummer especially.
both Christopher Plumber and Russell Crowe did a oscar worthy performance. and I was very surprised by seeing how much the movie is accurate to the real events. usually Hollywood does lot of stupid unnecessary changes to these kind of movies. but this was very accurate to the point
The interview that changed the tobacco game forever. And the movie The Insider changed my life. Still gives me chills to watch.
If the tobacco companies are saying that nicotine is not addictive, doesn't the disclaimer on the side of cigarette packs which is kind of like a "smoke At your own risk" warning kind of absolve the tobacco companies from liability since it's a personal choice for people to smoke?
@@Defender78those warnings were only added long, long after this story was run, and partially due to the man in this story
I quit Somking 4months in....This just made me stronger....
I don't smoke cigarettes in my life, it bad for my lungs.
Awesome!! Stay strong bro!!!
I’m trying to stop I’m down to a carton a day wish me luck .
@@jonwright1513 you can do it Jon!
Go head Ozzy!!!!!!!....this habit has been a real struggle for me....but I will keep pushing....thx for ur inspiration
Dr Jeffrey Wigand - A true American hero! Honest and Integrity here.
Thank you for your honesty in the face of overwhelming odds. The movie - 'The Insider' - is highly recommended... Especially Al Pacino played the role of the Producer of 60mins
I just saw the film last night and the acting of Crowe and Plummer during that interview is so spookily accurate, down to the dialogue and hand manners. Great film.
and cracking heads on the football field every week for 20 years doesn’t cause CTE
Neither does burning fossil fuels cause global warming..
And social media doesnt sell your personal information to advertisers.
@@wojciechgrodnicki6302 Social media... that's your concern? NSA actively and passively spying on it's citizens....
@@ShainAndrews I bet the NSA pays for all that data too. :D
@@wojciechgrodnicki6302 or they're selling.
This was one HELLUVA interview and story! Wow. 60 Minutes has done some legendary work over the years. This has to be one of the best. Dr Wigand is a hero, that certainly put it all on the line. "The Insider" told his story quite beautifully too. Talk about HUGE pressure
Many times, the truth is spoken by people who are less than perfect. That doesn't make the truth any less truthful. It is extremely difficult to speak truth to power. There are many ways in which someone can be hurt. For Dr. Wigand to still come out despite possibly losing his child and/or wife is nothing short of miraculous. I'm not saying he is a good man. I'm saying he stands out from the pack.
colleen t. If you can forgive the irony, no truer words have been spoken, m'lady. Absolutely! :o)
Well put
No one is perfect. Dr. Wigand included. As a scientist who knows about how tobacco is metabolized, and an insider at B & W, he literally blew the lid off the information about the addictive quality of cigarettes and pipe tobacco. True American hero, in my view--risked much to protect many.
That is correct. Wiggands' conduct is not relevant to the cause of cancer in the patients or any potential adverse or beneficial effects of tobacco consumption.
"from the pack" 😂
the straw that broke the *ahem* CAMEL's back
Oh!!! I see what you did there!!😉
Lol 😂
Haha, good catch.
Very low hanging fruit there..... 😬
Hmmmmmm!
Camel's 🚭 Back!
Like The Cigarettes!
Now do one on big pharma.
N Monsanto!
They prolly already did
WarpPal The pharmaceutical companies charge $2700 a month for my AIDS medication.60 💊
There was a documentary a while back about how big Pharma started and promoted the opioid epidemic.
@@V.E.R.O. Company was InSys.
He loses his job and his wife thinks about divorcing him what a great woman.
"bad things happen to good people" this is a example of that unlike Pablo Escobar his wife stayed until the end I dont know whats wrong with people
Dr wigand's ex wife she deciede to level false allegations against him just because he became broke and she wanted to continue the her lifestyle at his expense
And tried to convince him,and the rest of the world it was because of him.. typical...
@sass this is a typical example of Briffault's Law
@@decipheringthematrix56 found the incel/mgtow.
When i go to a gas station they have 4 different types of fuel and 200 types of tobacco. They're not gas stations. They're nicotine delivery stations.
@Edgar Alvarez Don't forget about all the good ol' junk food, energy drinks and sodas that help fuel the obesity epidemic. Gas stations are really just disease stations on all fronts.
OMG You're so brilliant. So REAL, AND WISE!
Funny you have to exaggerate 200 types of cigarettes are you crazy
Modern journalism could take a lesson from this production. In the face of overwhelming corruption and intense pressure, 60 minutes didn't role over to the deepest pockets at that time. Simply admirable.
If you know anything about Dr. Wigand's story, you know that CBS and 60 Minutes absolutely DID roll over for the tobacco industry, they refused to run the story until Wigand went to the extent of giving an extremely risky public deposition in Mississippi, which the Wall Street Journal picked up and ran as a story. As soon as CBS saw that they were going to lose exclusivity on the case, and that the cat would get out of the bag whether or not they held the story, they flip-flopped and ran the interview in the end. So yeah, not as courageous as you think, more an effort to save face.
Ah, but they almost did- the only reason they had the ability not to (and save their credibility) was because of B&W playing it too fast and loose sending that obvious smear dossier to the Times, which got all the press in NYC on Wigan’s side (out of pride, mostly- they didn’t want to be played like fools), and that coinciding with the sale of CBS after the story was initially squashed by its CEO (Lawrence Tisch) who also owned the 4th largest tobacco company in the U.S. Had that sale not happened, either at all or at least before the Times article dropped, it’s likely 60 Minutes wouldn’t have ran the story at all.
What’s the lesson there? Well to the corporations, it was “hey, all we gotta do is consolidate power more!” Because now, the same megacorp that owned CBS would also own the Times, and they’d own majority shares in the company CBS got sold to. And then none of this would happen - the same message to squash the story 60 Minutes got, the Times would get. CBS gets sold, it’s reporters ask if they can run the story now, the answer is still “No.”
They almost did. Remember, they didn't air his interview in the first cut of the story, out of fear of a B&W lawsuit. It wasn't until the Mississippi case that they found enough courage to face the lesser risk.
Still, it's a lot better than what's going on today.
@@richardstern9288what’s going on today. What is even remotely different today.
It’s nice to be reminded that real journalism once existed.
Russell never disappoints me - loved the movie.
No one is perfect neither is Dr Wigand - he did the right thing.
They nailed the unsympathetic wife in the movie.
She's got the worst attitude.
Yes, you're right. Particularly the scene when he loses the job, she's so cold and materialistic.
@Norm MacDonald Oh, gold digger... Didn't know that.
What movie?
@@bethanyboothe4817 the insider
My mother worships money over people too.
Tobacco firms knew that cigarettes cause cancer way back in 1950s but the companies suppressed all of medical studies not to reach the addiction. Tobacco is big business vapes, gums, patches are the alternatives .
It's amazing to see this, so many years after watching The Insider, which I saw AT LEAST 3x. It's one of the best movies, based on actual events, ever made. Jeffrey Wigand is a hero...pretty cool watching the actual 60min episode..no wonder Russell Crowe is Russell Crowe..and Michael Mann is Michael Mann
His wife leaving him was absolutely disgraceful
The money was gone and her with it.
sHE HAD TO TAKE CARE OF THE KIDS.....BUT SAD THEY HAD TO DIVORCE FOR HER TO DO IT!
@@laragreene8328Have you ever heard the song "Its -Cheaper To Keep Her"?
@@laragreene8328 Its too bad he didnt have that option.🙂
@@laragreene8328 STFU
Crazy how accurate the real interview is compared to the movie 'The Insider"
almost like they had seen it
@@AndyJackson380
It's about acting bro.
It might look easy to you because they obviously "saw" the interview but to produce it and improvise it while keeping it close to the original is a challenge.
You see that Russell Crowe looks more paranoid in the movie than wigand in real life.
@@dehlanshandirkayr6182 Within the movie, it's also noticeable that when Wigand shoots the interview, the dialogue between interviewee and interviewer plays out differently than the final interview, showing editing that happened in post-production to adjust the flow of the interview.
Ethan Lee that’s where I came from!
Yeah, especially the pause after the word, “felt.”
How do these lawyers look at themselves with self respect?
The boatloads of money presumably create that self-respect...
Darth Structure by having sold their souls to Mr Lucifer Mephistopheles Beelzebub when they pass the bar. I almost went to law school but never did and am damned glad. My soul remains intact and my life still has every bit of its original value if not a whole heap more. Dont get me wrong; I am 60 and I would enroll today in the event of asponsor interested in paying my tuition at an online law school, like Abramaham Lincoln University.
Once you give up integrity, the rest is a piece of cake.
They check their bank account before they look 😅
Lawyers never had there kind of things. Just tellin'
In the end, people saw the truth. You are on the good side of history. Thank you.
The movie "The Insider" revolve around this. Al Pacino and Russell Crowe were a fantastic duo. It shows how big tobacco silenced scientists and evidence.
Pretty sure anyone here knows that wise guy
Wigand, an American hero. Sandefur passed away one year after he retired, two years after the trial. Karma.
Not necessarily karma. That would depend on where Sanderfur is spending eternity.
He saved millions of lives, unfortunately not from those already addicted but stopped millions of young people from ever starting
Clifford Bodine. Thought provoking, indeed. But if there IS a god & he's supposed to be loving & just; supposed to be the complete opposite of the Devil, why would he reward a wicked bast**** like Sandifur with heavenly life?!
calodo2002. In one brief statement you're forgetting why Wigand chose the job with B&W in the 1st place. His aim was to create a NON-ADDICTIVE cigarette. What sounds impossible to you & I is very possible for a man with Wigand's knowledge of chemistry (and physics), his tenacious determination to make it a reality, and B&W's bottomless pocketbook
Wigand saw a way to change things for the better from INSIDE "the system," because this approach, had it worked, would've been more practical than piecing apart and taking the giant monster down.
And that's because the tobacco industry is simply too powerful. It exactly resembles the disposition of the senators, congressmen, high-powered lawyers, & various other behind-the-scenes political and financial power-brokers who keep the beast alive & well. They're fond of what is their own, and esp the wealth it generates, in BILLIONS of dollars at the expense of it's victims, the addicted smokers. "Killing millions to make million$" was an expression coined for this back in the 80's
Anyway, think for a just a minute about what you're really doing here. In the same statement you're also discrediting Wigand for the good he HAS managed to accomplish. Big tobacco has indeed been forced to pay millions of dollars in retroactive health costs to the state Medicare systems of Kentucky and of Mississippi. Thanks to him the "Seven Dwarfs"- - the seven heads of big tobacco who lied, straight-faced to Congress, saying cigarettes ARE NOT addictive under oath- - were exposed for this entire scandal. So greedy & heartless are they that the billions already being made weren't enough. They had to make cigarettes EVEN MORE addictive, just so MORE people than ever before would get hooked on cigarettes, and so that those ALREADY hooked would SPEND EVEN MORE on cigarettes than they already were! !
Such unimaginable wickedness! !
>>: (
@@magnificentmuttley154 i am currently dying from smoking cigs myself friend of mine just died from it
This is an amazing interview. Great bravery from a whistle-blower and CBS did a masterful job showing the damage to Wigand's life.
60 Minutes was the most excellent, classiest, magnificent and prestigious news program ever created on network television!
Morley Safer!
Mike Wallace!
Ed Bradley!
Diane Sawyer!
Andy Rooney!
What an amazing, awesome and allstar cast of masterpiece/masterclass news journalists!
Thank you for this upload.
All gone except for Diane Sawyer
@@V.E.R.O.
Thanks for the morbidity update.
By wearing your mask and washing your hands for at least 25 seconds; you too can do your part in preventing the the spread of covid19.
still is, man.
@@sillygoose635
Please wear your mask and wash your hands for at least 25 seconds to prevent the spread of covid19! Amen.
Not any more!
Wherever you find misery and suffering you'll find an Attorney either creating,or profiting or both from it....
Watched The Insider. We owe Dr. Wigand a lot for the public service he provided in this interview.
27:00 If its produced and marketed lawfully, but kills 425.000 people a year, in the US, then there is a problem with the law.
Dr wigand's ex wife she deciede to level false allegations against him just because he became broke and she wanted to continue the her lifestyle at his expense
The one who made false allegations against him was his first wife. The one who left him when he was fired was his second wife
@@missdeejay america makes it so easy for women to get away with divorce!! especially white women
Typical woman. All women want free money and a free life
Here after watching "THE INSIDER".
Way to stay current with movie viewing. May I recommend "Smokey and the Bandit?"
Same here
Here after watching "THE INSIDER".
Facts lol
Here before watching “the insider”
I am currently watching the movie feeling very sorry for Dr. Wigand and sacrifice he made loosing everything but glad the truth always remains the truth and saves the day!.
His wife was probably
The one who was most affected by the loss of his 300k salary. Who divorces a hero?
In the movie,The Insider, Dr.Wigand was depicted as a week person. The reality showed the contrary. The man is very articulate and he enjoyed a very confident personal.
I would presume that they tried to indicate his stress levels.
Menatoorus yeah, and from articles I’ve read, he cursed like a damned sailor
I wouldn’t say weak
‘ordinary people under extraordinary pressure’
My name is Mena u funny name
How was he depicted as weak? Dude was putting everything on the line. Anyone in his place would act the same.
Christopher Plummer played Mike Wallace so good I thought Mike Wallace was actually in the movie and was impressed that he was that good of an actor
The look on the face of that putz from 23:24 to 23:48 as Mike Wallace reads B&W own letter of praise for Dr. Wigand is pure schadenfreude.
"I don't believe nicotine is addictive."
Heck what that man believes! The fact remains -- that nicotine is addictive.
Very addictive!
@@codijo-myalaskandog122 Indeed
So addictive, that Thomas Sandefur died five months after the story was released.
Here after watching the biographical adaptation - The Insider starring Russell Crowe and Al Pacino. Inspiring!.
This is why we must be critical of ALL industries, there are very few people with this much integrity in this world. So we must do our own investigating...
Lowell Bergman is what every journalist should aspire to be: bold, tenacious and honorable.
I just finished watching the movie the Insider and it was good and showed how they tried everything to ruin his credibility hoping people wouldn't pay attention to anything he says
Hope Dr wingman life is ok, he has balls to battle this killers !!!!
Most of all integrity.
There's an old Frank Zappa interview where he defends tobacco and says he doesn't believe it's dangerous. He died of cancer a few years later.
Dr Weigand has a cool accent. He seems very personable for a highly educated doctor and speaks well.
You mean very articulate?
Unmistakably from New York
Shame on Wallace trying to bury this interview. Lowell Bergman was the reason the piece saw the light of day.
I just love how this big tobacco company man said "it's their choice to quit". It would be if his company hadn't perverted tobacco so much by creating ways to make nicotine more addictive, that some people are literally unable to quit. Stop adding additional poisons to your tobacco and give smokers a fighting chance to quit.
They don't want people to quit. That's why they did it. It's all about the money. Always has been and always will be.
After many unsuccessful attempts at quitting, I told my mind that it had been lied to, manipulated and abused and it should get VERY angry. That did it. I started hating everyone involved in the sale of tobacco.
And the corporate food industry is guilty of the same tactics- aggressive marketing of unhealthy food to children and denying that the role that the food industry has played in the obesity epidemic.
@@fmpAppsGood for you, I salute you!!! I despise both the food industry and tobacco industry for lying about their products and being immoral liars.
If you want to find out who is lying, find out whom you are not allowed to criticize.
If you want to find out who is telling the truth, find out whom they are trying to silence.
Notice how his wife abandoned ship when the checks stop rolling 😂😂😂
I’ve had 2 uncles 1aunt,1cousin, who’ve died from stage 4 lung cancer that came about from smoking,my aunt on my moms side and cousin on my dads side died the same day the same age67,same disease lung cancer also 2 of my childhood friends whom I’ve known for over 40 years have COPD,thank God I stopped in 1996,Mr Wigand ThankYou and May God Bless and keep you.
God bless you, also. I'm so glad you quit 25 years ago & saved your own life.
They should of quit smoking, their fault. I quit after 16 Years.
@@Defender78 I just want to thank for coming to that brilliant deduction that they should have stopped and your ground breaking research to come to the conclusion that it was their fault,sir you are a genius!
Great wife. Really teaching her kids important lessons in life: never marry a man with principles, sweeties. SMDH!
This makes me really ANGRY! At 5 years old my family went on a long trip; In a car with windows closed & a father who smoked constantly!
I was guilty of hiding his "smokes" from the trip & within 30 miles down the road, I admitted to taken the cigarettes out of my parents suitcase & hiding them. We had to go back to retrieve all of them. I was in major trouble... even though I confessed!
Obviously I could not tolerate cigarettes in 1968 even though I didn't know anything about tobacco. Three of us out of four people couldn't stand the smell & I was always coffin. But us 3 people didn't have a chance, we had to put up with it anyway.
All these years later; the 3 of us haven't ever smoked and are still alive yet the smoker died 35 years ago. I knew when I was a little girl that it was BAD ENOUGH too hide it.
This gentleman did the right thing to come forward with the truth. Not far he's had to pay the price that cost him so much!
American Scandal podcast sent me here. Let’s see how it goes!
Same. ✌
If you’re searching for the truth you’ve found it,have a seat make yourself comfortable .
but marijuana is a crime !!
@Respect/Walk dude we got one already. The former House guy John Boehner is a Cannabis Lobbyist now.
I am so high right now. God bless California and Colorado.
Truly a hero who stand up for what is right. God bless you!
Russell Crowe did a good job mimicking his voice and mannerisms.
Hear, hear!
Not to mention getting his body to look like middle-aged guy with a belly. The fact that he sculpted his body to do The Gladiator next is pretty impressive.
@@mikelin2703 he really let himself go for 'Unhinged'.
I just watched the movie! The man is a world class hero!
This is just sick. I always say we need to put these cigarette companies out of business, and stop gas stations and stores from selling tobacco products. I lost my grandmother to lung cancer almost a decade ago. She had smoked a long time ago, but quit. I was so upset when I heard she had passed. Let’s come together, and stop these dirty companies from selling something that kills thousands of people every year.
Why are you not mentioning secondhand smoke in your post?
I quit smoking years ago. 60 Minutes is also very addictive, but I can't or won't quit watching it!
I like your comment.
I was a smoker for 15 years. I quit 8 years ago. Fck Big Tobacco.
And marijuana's still illegal? WTF
Biggest competition to Big Tobacco. It was illegalized back in the day due to bologna accusations.
@Austin Hill, of course.
Yeah because tobacco alcohol and pharmaceutical industries opposing marijuana legalization
@@JJSmalls But bologna is delicious
The Insider is the terrific film that tells this story. Lowell Bergman and Wigand are heroes. Thomas Sandefur, head of Brown and Williamson, is as corrupt and evil as they come. Tragically, for the American public, he still holds that position.
I miss Mike Wallace. He took no BS from that lawyer. Real news, not fake.
"Ma'am, we may be in the same business but we're not in the same profession.
I came here because of The Insidier movie and that's just crazy.
“WIPE THAT SMIRK OFF YOUR FACE!!”
GANGSTA
GANGSTA
Here because I watched The Insider and I wanted to hear his interview.
The harder tobacco tried to prove wiegand was lying the more they made themself guilty...
This is a story of a man against the capital. Give my highest respect to all of you
Hey- I gots an idear- let's put _ammonia_ in our cigarettes and make them even _more_ noxious. Then we will flavor them directly with *cancer cells.* _Hehe._
Bob Bowie “increased biological activity”
And now we have big oil saying global warming and petroleum use "isn't dangerous ". The more things change, the more they stay the same
The Insider and The Big Short are great films.
Both are fantastic movies! I watch them one after the other about 3x a month for good measure!
we need more people like Dr. Weigand
We need lots more people like him.
I might eat, but I don't smoke. I seldom have a drink and I don't mess with drugs. I'm glad I got an educational lesson on the dangers of tobacco in school.
Damn, watching this, you can see just how close Russell Crowe got his appearance to match Dr. Wigand in the movie. Such a great film too!
Crowe played Wigand right before he did Gladiator.
This video makes me so glad I stopped smoking at my senior year of high school. live well and stay smoke free everyone....
Admire J. Wigand , a man of principals !
*principles. Be a man of spelling.
You know how funny it is now to say "nicotine isnt addictive"
Started listening to the podcast American Scandal & they did a story on Big Tobacco which brought me here & wow! Great journalism from 60 minutes & amazing story overall
Give this man 👨 a Nobel Prize!!!
What will we ever do without the original 60 Minutes correspondents here to do hard reporting and deliver it with integrity? They were groundbreaking for their time and simply the best
Someone should start a go fund me for this man so he knows losing his job was worth it and even years later he is a hero
Damn I feel old when I seen his pencil sharpener and remembering having the exact same one.
All those CEOs should be in jail and still in jail to this day. The courts are a mockery.
But the tobacco industry did paid $246 billion to settle lawsuits from all 50 states.
I miss Mike. Whatever happened to investagetive journalism? ?? We need the young people to go into IJ and expose these terrible people who run and protect corrupt corporations.
I agree, we do. But ofttimes people who rustle up stories are then dragged though mud. It's especially bad now, in the age of social media. People need to realize that someone can have different opinions than you and that that doesn't make them an enemy.
Wow, the guy who played Mike Moore in the Insider looks just like the actual guy. Amazing casti-- oh wait, never mind.
I was thinking the same thing. Watched the movie last night,
and watched this video just now. I thought, "Wtf, I could've sworn that guy was in the movie."
Now I see that he played himself in the movie, lol.
Yeah lol, Wigand looks nothing like Crowe.
It's all about money. Those CEO's don't want to hurt their lifestyles.